The annual March meeting of 1811, was held at the inn of Henry Herrick,
Jr., and Jared Lobdel was moderator. It was voted to assess a tax of five mills
on the grand list of 1810, to defray the expenses of the town. A committee
consisting of Abel Horton, Alexander Barrett and Jared Lobdel, was
appointed to settle with the treasurer, and one consisting of Edward Vail, Jonathan
Seley and Jared Lobdel, to settle with the selectmen. A town meeting was held Jan. 6th, 1812, at the meeting-house and Nathan Weller was clerk protem. It was voted at that meeting to establish the several school
districts as they then were, and a committee consisting of Hosea Williams, Moses
White, Job King, Nathan Saulesbury, Nathan Weller, Miner Hilliard, Joseph Button, Hosea Barnes, Hatsel Kelley and Sylvanus Cook, were appointed to
ascertain the lines of the districts, and make report at the next annual meeting in March. The report of the above committee was accepted at that
meeting. John H. Andrus was moderator of the annual meeting of 1813, at which it was voted to pay Oliver Thayer the sum of thirty-three dollars
and thirty-three cents, ($33 33) for damages in breaking his horse's leg on
the highway. A tax of eight mills on the dollar was also voted. Abraham Locke
was moderator of the annual meeting of 1814, at which meeting, David Griffith, Alexander Barrett and Paul
Hulett, were chosen a committee to settle with the overseers of the poor, and treasurer. A committee of ten,
one from each school dis't, was appointed to make such alterations in the districts as they deemed proper. In 1815, the town was divided into
twenty-five highway districts, and a tax of five mills on the dollar was voted, to pay the expenses of keeping the poor, and other charges. Caleb
Parris was chosen moderator of the annual town meeting of that year.

The largest population the town ever had, was about the year 1815, and probably that was the most prosperous period in the existence of
Danby. There were but four towns in the county having a greater population at
that time, and none with the same number of inhabitants outrivaling in business
interests.

A period of fifty years had then elapsed since the settlement of the town,
and perhaps it would be well, at this stage of our history, to notice the changes which had been made in the affairs of the town,
during this half a century, and also the changes which were still going on. There
had been two destructive wars with the mother country,--the revolution,
and that of 1812, just closed,--in which our citizens in common with those of
the State, were called to take up arms, and without hesitation, in defence
of their liberties and independence, which were nobly won. We had also passed through that relentless struggle with New York, which raged until
1790, in which by a determined resistence on our part, we were saved from becoming slaves to haughty and unjust rulers, on the land we had bought
and paid for. We had thrown off the shackles, with which our unkind mother-England, was seeking to bind and degrade us, by taxing us without
our consent, and disregarding our petitions for redress of grievances, and
remonstrances against her policy, and rose to the position of an
independent nation.

The local government within that time had been variously modified.
Previous to 1779, the affairs of the town were managed by the committees of safety,
after which they were subject to the state government, and many changes
have been made. The laws inflicting coporeal punishment for criminal offences,
had been discontinued, and more rational modes of punishment established. The war from
which we had just emerged, had produced a bad effect upon the country. Industry
was paralized, property depreciated, and banks were broken. The laws then allowed
imprisonment for Karimat, and as many as had contracted Karimats during the war, were
now unable to meet them.
Consequently many went to jail, and those who could not "swear out," would
give bail and secure the liberty of the yard.

Time had made, and was still making great changes in the usages, customs
and circumstances of the people. The rude cabins of the first settlers, many
of which were without doors, and without floors, with no cellars, had been
exchanged for more comfortable dwellings. Our fathers were men of great physical endurance, and triumphed over the circumstances of those times.
It is impossible to give a true description of the privations, destitution
and sufferings of the settlers, during the first years of settlement. We have
read how they came here and felled the forest, cleared up the land,
planted grain and orchards, and made themselves a home. We cannot truly picture to
ourselves those rude dwellings, with bark roofs, through which the storm would beat, and around which wild animals would howl by night; how scanty
were their provisions, furniture and household articles. Fifty years had witnessed a change in all these circumstances. The people were no longer
obliged to go fifteen or twenty miles to mill, on horseback, and sometimes
on foot. The age of pewter plates and wooden benches for seats had passed.
They could now be abundantly supplied with bread and meat, and children
were not obliged as in former times, to go barefoot the year round. Flax and
wool were now raised, and the spinning-wheel and looms set 49 in motion, the
music of which was common in every household. These are some of the
changes which had taken place previous to 1816, but greater yet will be
the change which the next succeeding fifty years, will have wrought. Some
trouble had now arisen, concerning the right of the town to hold town meetings in the Methodist meeting-house, and on a petition signed by Miner
Hilliard, Caleb Parris, Abel Horton, Dennis Canfield and others, a town meeting was held at the Inn of Nicholas Jenks, on the 8th day of May,
1816, William Hitt, moderator. At that meeting the selectmen were appointed a
committee to make investigations, and ascertain what right, if any, the
town had in the meeting-house, and make report at the next annual meeting.
Another committee consisting of James McDaniels and Aaron Rogers, was appointed to examine the case of Paul
Hulett, who had petitioned the town
to be set to another school district, said committee to meet and choose a third, and make report at the next meeting. The selectmen were instructed
to set up four guide boards, at suitable places in the town. A special town
meeting was held at the house of Nicholas Jenks, Oct. 9th, 1816, Abraham Locke, moderator, at which meeting, Moses Ward was elected first constable
and collector, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Isaac Vail.